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Dark Energy & GEST:
the Galactic Exoplanet Survey Telescope
• Cosmology with a Exoplanet Search Mission
• a MIDEX Proposal currently under review
– $180M NASA OSS Cost cap
• Related option
– STEP (Survey for Terrestrial ExoPlanets) is under
consideration as Advanced Mission Concept)
David Bennett
University of Notre Dame
NASA’s Exoplanet Goals
“The time is right to make the search for Earth-like planets around
other stars a major priority for astronomy. This is a goal worthy of a
civilization.” -- HST and Beyond (Dressler 1996)
• The cornerstone of NASA’s exoplanet search
program is the Terrestrial Planet Finder (TPF)
• The McKee-Taylor Decadal Survey Report:
support for TPF is “predicated on the assumption
that space- and ground-based searches will
confirm the expectation that terrestrial planets are
common”
• GEST can do this
Exoplanet Search Mission Requirements
• Telescope aperture  1m
• Continuous view of
Galactic bulge for  6
months per year
– other targets when bulge
is near the Sun: Cosmology is free!
• Wide field of view: ~2 sq. deg.
• Near diffraction limited imaging: FWHM  0.3”
– Implies large pixel count: ~0.6 Gpix for 0.2” pixels
• Detectors sensitive in near-IR
– Highly reddened Galactic bulge fields
• Data rate  14 Mbits/sec continuous (uncompressed)
A Wide FOV Space Telescope Finds Earths
Strong planetary signals
Uniquely sensitive at a > 0.7AU
Taxpayers like exoplanets!
The GEST Midex Proposal
The GEST Team
D. Bennett (Notre Dame), I. Bond (Auckland), E. Cheng (GSFC),
J. Connor (Alaska), K. Cook (LLNL), P. Garnavich(Notre Dame),
K. Griest (UCSD), D. Jewitt (Hawaii), N. Kaiser (Hawaii),
T. Lauer (NOAO), J. Lunine (Arizona), G. Luppino (Hawaii),
D. Minniti (Catolica), S. Peale (UCSB), S. Rhie (Notre Dame),
J. Rhodes (GSFC), J. Schneider (Paris Obs.), M. Shao(JPL)
R. Stevenson (Notre Dame), C. Stubbs (UW),
N. Woolf (Arizona), P. Yock (Auckland)
Industrial Partners
Lockheed Martin Space Systems (LMSS)
- LMSS-Sunnyvale: Spacecraft
- MIT’s Lincoln Labs: Instrument
- Telescope:
•Arizona & Composite Optics
Galactic Exoplanet Survey Telescope
•
•
•
•
•
1m telescope
2.1 sq. deg. FOV
shutter for camera
0.2”/pixel => 6108 pixels
continuous view of Galactic bulge
– for 8 months per year
– 60 degree Sun avoidance
Polar Orbit for GEST
MIDEX proposal
• <0.025” pointing stability & drift
– maintained >95% of the time
• observe in dither pattern on grid with 0.05” steps =>
accurate photometry
• MIDEX level budget (almost: donations are accepted)
08:50:56
GEST
Optics
08:43:56
30.00
GEST 1.0m
Scale:
0.08
CM
12-Oct-01
Three Mirror Anastigmat
• 2.41.2 degree FOV
• allows filter wheel
– 3-4 very wide filters
25.00
GEST 1.0m
Scale:
0.10
CM
12-Oct-01
• non-circular field => more
events!
• better baffling
GEST Instrument
• High sensitivity in near-IR: 50% better than EEV
• diffraction limited optics at ~0.8m
• 32 Lincoln Labs 3k  6k CCDs
– 10m pixels; 600 Mpix total
• passively cooled to -90 C
GEST
Focal Plane Layout
Layout of 32 CCD FPA
shutter concept
Readout not simultaneous:
minimizes readout electronics
Survey for Terrestrial ExoPlanets
• Under Consideration for NASA’s Extra-Solar
Planets: Advanced Mission Concepts NRA
– Proposal for 1-year study phase
– Cost cap $300M, but there is no budget separate budget
for a mission
• 1.5m telescope aperture
• CCDs & HgCdTe detectors (passively cooled)
• Higher sensitivity gives statistics on Jupiters +
Earths in the same system
• High Earth Orbit: inclined GEO or higher
• Lincoln Labs electronic shutter
• No moving parts except for filters
Lincoln Labs Integrated Electronic Shutter
for Back-Illuminated CCD Imager
Objectives
VSD = 3 V
• Transfer smear reduction
• High-speed photography
• Target tracking
• Range gating
• Real-time adaptive optics
VIA = 18 V
VSD = 3 V
Performance
• Short adjustable exposure time (< 100 ns)
• High extinction ratio (> 5000 forl < 580 nm)
Light
Input
Shutter Open
Electronic Shutter Pixel Cross Section
VSD
VIA
VSD = 18V
VIA < 12V
VSD = 18V
VSD
CCD Gate
n+
n+
n Buried
Channel
Contoured
p+ Buried
Layer
n+
Shutter
Drain
High Resistivity
p– Substrate
Light
Input
p+
Shutter Closed
Lincoln Labs Electronic Shutter
GEST/STEP Cosmology Program
• High Redshift SN search
• Deep, wide weak lensing survey
• Comes for free
– Use spare time when Galactic bulge is close to the Sun
– But telescope parameters are optimised for planets
• A joint exoplanet/cosmology mission might be
sensible
– But it doesn’t fit easily into existing NASA programs
High-Z SN with GEST or STEP
• 1000’s of 0.6 < z < 1.7 SN
• measure  to a few %
• photometric redshifts
• STEP: optical & IR
photometry
• GEST Light curves
– Only rest frame U-band
– A small number of IR obs.
From HST/WFC3 or NGST
• SN type classification from
light curve shape
• Spectra for a subset of SN
Spectrographs for GEST SN Search
OSIRIS: OH-suppressing IR Imaging
Spectrograph – under construction
Not quite dedicated to GEST follow-up, unfortunately.
Dark Energy Results from parttime SN Survey
• Results from 1 mon.
of GEST data taken
over 6 months
• Statistical errors can
be made smaller by
a factor of 3 if the
SN search gets 10
months of
observations
Weak Lensing with GEST
• 500-1000 sq. degrees surveyed
• 0.2 arcsec. pixels  ~ 0.15 arcsec.
resolution with dithering
• measure galaxy shapes down to
0.3-0.5 arcsec. half light radius
• measure shapes to I=26
• ~108 galaxy shapes over course of mission
• 3-4 filters  photo z’s  subdivide into z
bins
GEST will measure
•
•
•
•
•
variance of the shear distribution  M8
variance of the size distribution (magnification effect)  M
skewness of the shear distribution  independent measure of M
relationship between galaxies and shear  bias parameter b
redshift dependence of above parameters
Comparison to SNAP and HST/HUFI
• 80  imaging area of HST/HUFI
–
–
–
–
20  better thruput for cosmology
Planet search not possible from HST orbit
~2  HST/HUFI cost
Allows HST exhibit in Air & Space Museum!
• About as good as SNAP for statistical error bars
– But SNAP emphasizes systematics
– STEP might get optical & IR light curves comparable to
SNAP
– Spectra from ground (for z~1) and HST or NGST